Expand description
A crate for parsing and using JSON pointers, as specified in RFC
6901. Unlike the pointer
method
built into serde_json
, this handles both validating JSON Pointers before
use and the URI Fragment Identifier Representation.
§Creating a JSON Pointer
JSON pointers can be created with a literal [&str]
, or parsed from a String
.
extern crate json_pointer;
use json_pointer::JsonPointer;
fn main() {
let from_strs = JsonPointer::new([
"foo",
"bar",
]);
let parsed = "/foo/bar".parse::<JsonPointer<_, _>>().unwrap();
assert_eq!(from_strs.to_string(), parsed.to_string());
}
§Using a JSON Pointer
The JsonPointer
type provides .get()
and .get_mut()
, to get references
and mutable references to the appropriate value, respectively.
extern crate json_pointer;
#[macro_use]
extern crate serde_json;
use json_pointer::JsonPointer;
fn main() {
let ptr = "/foo/bar".parse::<JsonPointer<_, _>>().unwrap();
let document = json!({
"foo": {
"bar": 0,
"baz": 1,
},
"quux": "xyzzy"
});
let indexed = ptr.get(&document).unwrap();
assert_eq!(indexed, &json!(0));
}
§URI Fragment Identifier Representation
JSON Pointers can be embedded in the fragment portion of a URI. This is the
reason why most JSON pointer libraries require a #
character at the beginning
of a JSON pointer. The crate will detect the leading #
as an indicator to
parse in URI Fragment Identifier Representation. Note that this means that this
crate does not support parsing full URIs.
extern crate json_pointer;
use json_pointer::JsonPointer;
fn main() {
let str_ptr = "/f%o".parse::<JsonPointer<_, _>>().unwrap();
let uri_ptr = "#/f%25o".parse::<JsonPointer<_, _>>().unwrap();
assert_eq!(str_ptr, uri_ptr);
}
Structs§
- A JSON Pointer.
Enums§
- An error that can be encountered when indexing using a JSON pointer.
- An error that can be encountered when parsing.